Basil Greenhill, Date of Birth, Date of Death

    

Basil Greenhill

British historian and diplomat

Date of Birth: 26-Feb-1920

Date of Death: 08-Apr-2003

Profession: diplomat, historian

Nationality: United Kingdom

Zodiac Sign: Pisces


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About Basil Greenhill

  • Dr.
  • Basil Jack Greenhill CMG (26 February 1920, in Bristol – 8 April 2003), was a diplomat, museum director and historian. He went to Bristol Grammar School, before reading philosophy, politics and economics at Bristol University, but his time there was interrupted by wartime naval service.
  • In the navy, he rose from rating to lieutenant, working at the radar research establishment at Malvern, and testing radar on bombers.
  • He emerged in 1946 as a lieutenant, and on the completion of his degree he joined what became the Commonwealth Relations Office, where he stayed until 1966.
  • He was appointed CMG on his retirement in the 1967 New Year Honours.
  • In 1967 he became the Director of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, England, until 1983.
  • He also served a term as Vice-President of the Society for Nautical Research.
  • He was also the author of over forty books and numerous articles on maritime history, many of them produced in collaboration with his second wife, Ann Giffard.
  • His best-known book was his two-volume The Merchant Schooners (1951–57).
  • He also published Westcountrymen In Prince Edward's Isle (1967), on Devon shipbuilders in Canada, and Boats And Boatmen Of Pakistan (1971). In 1980, Dr Greenhill received a PhD from Bristol University on his published work, and honorary doctorates from Plymouth University and Hull in 1996 and 2002. Dr.
  • Greenhill died at St.
  • Dominick, Cornwall on 8 April 2003.

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